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We are friends who love making simple food look beautiful. We hope our recipes will inspire you to get into the kitchen this season.
Aoife McElwain works in front of the camera writing the recipes and styling the food, while Mark Duggan works behind the camera to make sure it all looks as delicious as possible. We work with editors such as Killian Broderick and music supervisors like Nialler9 to make sure that our finished videos look and sound as smart as possible.
We work with brands like Glenisk and Folláin to help them create delicious video content for their online platforms.
When we're not making videos, we write a weekly column called Speedy Suppers on Thursdays in The Irish Independent. Aoife writes the recipes and styles the food while Mark takes the photographs.

16 Sep bacon + apple salad

I love the changing of the seasons, but I particularly love when autumns starts to make itself known. It’s such a subtle shift, that arrives faithfully every September. It’s like clockwork, but every year it still feels like a pleasant surprise. It’s a dip in the temperature and a change in the light, as the sun starts to reflect on autumnal tones of reds and browns.

This shift can always be felt in our kitchens, too, and the best kind of cooking is the kind that reflects the seasons. Words like local and seasonal have become marketing buzzwords but when you really connect to their core meaning, it can make for truly special moments. Not every meal I make for myself reflects these values – sometimes life is too busy for local and seasonal – but I make an effort to keep in touch with the seasons. Because when you connect to autumn in both your meal and your pace, you can feel like you’ve reconnected with the natural rhythm of life, and that’s a magical feeling.

See? I get fiercely wistful as autumn approaches! It makes me dreamy and slow, and this week I’veput that effort into my supper. It’s still speedy as ever, but with the apples and hazelnuts, this salad is a decidedly autumnal treat. On my best day, I’d be using apples from David Llewellyn’s Orchard in North County Dublin (www.llewellynsorchard.ie) and hazelnuts from Hell’s Kettle Farm in County Wicklow (www.hellskettle.ie). To suitably accompany these special apples and hazelnuts, I’d use really good bacon from the organic Coolanowle Farm Butcher (www.coolanowle.com), based in County Laois. They also have a stall in the Green Door Market in Dublin 8.

But even if you’re not having your best day and you can’t get to the farmer’s market to pick up ingredients that really are part of the changing season around you, this salad might help you inspire to seek out more authentic autumnal experiences.

Bacon + Apple Salad

Serves 2

Prep Time: 15 minutes

Cooking Time: 10 minutes

Ingredients

4 rashers of really good streaky bacon

1 large handful of hazelnuts

Large handful of green beans

2 tablespoons of Irish rapeseed oil

Half a tablespoon of red wine vinegar

Half a tablespoon of Dijon mustard

1 tablespoon of runny honey

Salt

Pepper

1 crisp red apple

Good bread, to serve

1. Start by cooking your bacon rashers in a hot frying pan with a little oil. Cook until beautifully crisp, about ten minutes in the hot pan. Remove from the heat and let them sit on kitchen paper towel to absorb some of the excess grease.

2. Roughly chop your hazelnuts. In a dry frying pan, toast the hazelnut shards over a medium heat until well toasted but not burnt. Set aside.

3. Move on to your green beans. Use a sharp knife to top and tail them so they have tidy ends. Place them in a pot of boiling water for 3 minutes, no more, so they maintain a lovely crunchy bite. Drain the water and trainsfer the green beans to a large mixing bowl, and let them cool completely.

4. While your green beans are cooling, you can make your dressing by mixing together your rapeseed oil, red wine vinegar, honey and Dijon mustard. Add a generous pinch of salt and pepper to the dressing, to taste.

5. Next, remove the core of your apple and then slice into pieces. I’ve done mine in thin matchstick strips, which I think looks rather nice. Once the green beans are cold and you’ve added your apples to the mixing bowl, add in the dressing. You may not want to use all of the dressing, just coat the green beans and apples as much or as little as you like. You can always serve the remaining dressing on the side.

6. Assemble your salads by dividing the green beans and apples onto two plates. Top with a sprinkling of the chopped hazelnuts. Slice the yummy bacon into chunks and add to the salad. If you had some to hand, a bit of blue cheese would be lovely in this salad too. Serve with some good toasted sourdough bread on the side.

This recipe first appeared in The Irish Independent on 15th September 2016